0800 404 9751

1112.9 oz HM Mint Bombay SS Gairsoppa Shipwreck Silver Bar

You're using an older browser that we are unable to fully
support. Your experience with our site may be less than optimal due to
our focus on performance, security and reliability. Consider upgrading
your browser if you have problems using our site. Learn More

This website uses cookies to better serve you and provide a more user friendly experience.

Click For Full Screen

Year, style and other qualities may vary.

Click For Full Screen

Year, style and other qualities may vary.

Click For Full Screen

Year, style and other qualities may vary.

Click For Full Screen

Year, style and other qualities may vary.

Click For Full Screen

Year, style and other qualities may vary.

Only 1 Available!

Lightly Used

Purity: 9994

Quantity

Added 1112.9 oz HM Mint Bombay SS Gairsoppa Shipwreck Silver Bar

The hunt for shipwreck treasure has captured the hearts and minds of many, and the story of the SS Gairsoppa and this silver bar is one of the greatest!
Collectors will appreciate the rarity and unique appearance of this piece of WWII history.

This bar spent over 70 years on the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean, and is one of only 462 999 pure silver bars that were recovered and sold.
It is stamped as being from the HM Mint Bombay, which stands for His Majesty's Mint in Bombay.
The vast majority of the silver recovered was melted down, further refined and used to create small bars, coins and rounds.

The SS Gairsoppa was a steel hulled British steam merchant ship that was built and launched in 1919, likely named after Gersoppa falls in India.
Owned by the British India Steam Navigation Company Ltd of London it had been a civilian merchant ship until it was enlisted for the war effort as a cargo ship for war supplies.

During a supply voyage that began in December, 1940, she was loaded with silver ingots, pig iron and tea sailing from Calcutta, India to Britain.
The Gairsoppa had sailed around the Cape in South Africa to the South Atlantic where she met up with a fleet of other merchant ships at the port of Freetown in Sierra Leone under Master Gerald Hyland.
She was to sail from there to Galway, Ireland where the cargo would be offloaded.

But not long after leaving Sierra Leone the fleet was beset by high winds and heavy surf in the open waters of the Atlantic.
The Gairsoppa began to run low on coal and was forced to separate from the rest of the fleet in order to make a more direct route to Galway. She never arrived.

On February 16, 1941, the S.S. Gairsoppa was spotted by a German Focke-Wulf Fw 200 aircraft and was subsequently torpedoed on February 17 by a German U-boat designation U-101 under the command of Ernst Mengersen and sank with 85 hands lost.
1 life boat under the charge of the second officer, R.H. Ayres managed to escape with 6 other crew members, but only Ayres was pulled from the sea alive after the boat capsized.

For almost 70 years the Gairsoppa sat at the bottom of the sea, nearly 3 miles deep in the Atlantic Ocean about 300 miles Southwest of the Irish coast.
After a couple unsuccessful attempts to find a salvage crew on September 26, 2011, Florida-based Odyssey Marine Exploration confirmed the identity and location of the Gairsoppa.
Recovery began and as of July 23, 2013 a reported 61 tons of silver bullion had been recovered.
The majority of the silver recovered (3 of 4 lots) was 915 pure Dore (partly refined) bars.

Here is your opportunity to own a piece of history, complete with letter of authenticity from Odyssey Marine Exploration.

Metal Weight (ozt)

1112.9 oz HM Mint Bombay SS Gairsoppa Shipwreck Silver Bar
The hunt for shipwreck treasure has captured the hearts and minds of many, and the story of the SS Gairsoppa and this silver bar is one of the greatest!
Collectors will appreciate the rarity and unique appearance of this piece of WWII history.
This bar spent over 70 years on the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean, and is one of only 462 999 pure silver bars that were recovered and sold.
It is stamped as being from the HM Mint Bombay, which stands for His Majesty's Mint in Bombay.
The vast majority of the silver recovered was melted down, further refined and used to create small bars, coins and rounds.
The SS Gairsoppa was a steel hulled British steam merchant ship that was built and launched in 1919, likely named after Gersoppa falls in India.
Owned by the British India Steam Navigation Company Ltd of London it had been a civilian merchant ship until it was enlisted for the war effort as a cargo ship for war supplies.
During a supply voyage that began in December, 1940, she was loaded with silver ingots, pig iron and tea sailing from Calcutta, India to Britain.
The Gairsoppa had sailed around the Cape in South Africa to the South Atlantic where she met up with a fleet of other merchant ships at the port of Freetown in Sierra Leone under Master Gerald Hyland.
She was to sail from there to Galway, Ireland where the cargo would be offloaded.
But not long after leaving Sierra Leone the fleet was beset by high winds and heavy surf in the open waters of the Atlantic.
The Gairsoppa began to run low on coal and was forced to separate from the rest of the fleet in order to make a more direct route to Galway. She never arrived.
On February 16, 1941, the S.S. Gairsoppa was spotted by a German Focke-Wulf Fw 200 aircraft and was subsequently torpedoed on February 17 by a German U-boat designation U-101 under the command of Ernst Mengersen and sank with 85 hands lost.
1 life boat under the charge of the second officer, R.H. Ayres managed to escape with 6 other crew members, but only Ayres was pulled from the sea alive after the boat capsized.
For almost 70 years the Gairsoppa sat at the bottom of the sea, nearly 3 miles deep in the Atlantic Ocean about 300 miles Southwest of the Irish coast.
After a couple unsuccessful attempts to find a salvage crew on September 26, 2011, Florida-based Odyssey Marine Exploration confirmed the identity and location of the Gairsoppa.
Recovery began and as of July 23, 2013 a reported 61 tons of silver bullion had been recovered.
The majority of the silver recovered (3 of 4 lots) was 915 pure Dore (partly refined) bars.
Here is your opportunity to own a piece of history, complete with letter of authenticity from Odyssey Marine Exploration.